Fulda

Fulda, a city in Hesse-Nassau, Germany; in 1941 it had 26,000 inhabitants,
of whom about 1,000 were Jews

The first reference to Jews there is in 1235, when they lived in a street
which bordered the Rhon river. On December 28th of that year a blood accusation
was raised against them and about thirty Jews fell victim to this false
charge.

The history of the Jewish community in Fulda was marked again and again
by persecutions. In 1309, 600 Jews were killed as alleged causers of a
plague. Again in 1349.

The situation improved in the 18th Century and after 1880 their history
merged with the Jews of Germany.
(From The Encyclopedia Judaica by Adolf Kobler)